Stockwell | |||||||||||
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General information | |||||||||||
Location | Railway Terrace, Stockwell, South Australia | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 34°26′20″S139°03′17″E / 34.4389535363559°S 139.05469737557968°E | ||||||||||
Owned by | South Australian Railways 1917 - 1978 Australian National 1978 - 1992 | ||||||||||
Operated by | South Australian Railways 1860 - 1968 | ||||||||||
Line(s) | Truro line | ||||||||||
Distance | 88 kilometres from Adelaide | ||||||||||
Tracks | 2 | ||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||
Structure type | Ground | ||||||||||
Other information | |||||||||||
Status | Demolished | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 24 September 1917 | ||||||||||
Closed | December 1968 | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Stockwell railway station was located on the Barossa Valley railway line. It served the town of Stockwell.
Stockwell railway station opened on 24 September 1917 with the opening of the railway line from Nuriootpa to Truro. [1] The station consisted of a facility comprising a ticket office, platforms, etc. for loading and unloading train passengers and freight. [2] In 1978, the station and all associated infrastructure was included in the transfer of South Australian Railways to Australian National. The station closed to regular passenger use in December 1968 although some special train tours by the Australian Railway Historical Society (ARHS) used the line to Truro until 1979 when Australian National declared the line unsafe. [3] The last ARHS special to use the station was on 20 September 1981 consisting of Rx 207. The line past Stockwell was closed and removed in 1987 but the remaining section continued to be used to store surplus rolling stock until February 1990; the line and station was closed and removed. There is no longer any trace of the station.
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The Maritime Line is a railway line that runs in the valley of the River Fal from Truro, the county town, to Falmouth on the south coast of Cornwall, England.
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Truro is a town in South Australia, 80 km northeast of Adelaide. It is situated in an agricultural and pastoral district on the Sturt Highway, east of the Barossa Valley, where the highway crosses somewhat lofty and rugged parts of the Mount Lofty Ranges. At the 2021 census, Truro had a population of 523.
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Locomotive No. 1 hauled the first passenger train in New South Wales, Australia. It was built by Robert Stephenson and Company. In 1846, the Sydney Railway Company was formed with the objective of building a railway line between Sydney and Parramatta. No. 1 was one of four locomotives that arrived by sea from the manufacturer in January 1855. The first passenger train hauled by No. 1 was a special service from Sydney Station to Long Cove viaduct on 24 May 1855, Queen Victoria's birthday.
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The South Gippsland railway line is a partially closed railway line in Victoria, Australia. It was first opened in 1892, branching from the Orbost line at Dandenong, and extending to Port Albert. Much of it remained open until December 1994. Today, only the section between Dandenong and Cranbourne remains open for use. The section of the line from Nyora to Leongatha was used by the South Gippsland Tourist Railway until it ceased operations in 2016. The section from Nyora to Welshpool, with extension trail to Port Welshpool and a portion of the former line at Koo Wee Rup, have been converted into the Great Southern Rail Trail.
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The Truro and Newquay Railway was a Great Western Railway line in Cornwall, England, designed to keep the rival London and South Western Railway (LSWR) out of the west of the county. The line was completed in 1905 and closed in 1963.
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The Barossa Valley railway line is a railway line with several branches, running from Gawler into and through the Barossa Valley. The original terminus was at Angaston. A branch was built from Nuriootpa via Stockwell to Truro, and a further branch from that to Penrice. The Angaston and Truro branches were closed and removed; the line to Penrice remains but has not been used since 2014.
Stockwell is a settlement in South Australia. At the 2006 census, Stockwell had a population of 534. Stockwell is named after Samuel Stockwell, an early landowner in the area. Stockwell was a station on the Truro railway line from 1917 to 1968 when the line closed to regular service, and closed completely in 1992.
The Bluebird railcars were a class of self-propelled diesel-hydraulic railcar built by the South Australian Railways' Islington Railway Workshops between 1954 and 1959.
The Bellarine Railway, formerly the Bellarine Peninsula Railway, is a volunteer-operated steam-driven tourist railway located in Victoria, Australia. It operates on a 16 km section of a formerly disused branch line on the Bellarine Peninsula between the coastal town of Queenscliff and Drysdale, near Geelong.